Pubdate: Tue, 13 Dec 2016 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Rachel Mendleson Page: A1 SICK KIDS URGED TO 'STEP UP' ON MOTHERISK SCANDAL Hospital should own its role, and help foot bill, in fallout from faulty drug tests, CAS head says Children's aid societies are calling on the Hospital for Sick Children to "step up" and own the role it played in the Motherisk scandal that saw faulty drug and alcohol hair tests used in thousands of child protection cases. Mary Ballantyne, executive director of the Ontario Association of Children's Aid Societies (OACAS), said Sick Kids, which housed the discredited Motherisk Drug Testing Laboratory, should do more to assist in the significant efforts underway to deliver justice to those affected. "Behind a true apology is continuing to make amends and . . . continuing to help with the work that needs to be done," Ballantyne said in an interview on Monday. "I would like to see Sick Kids stand behind their apology. I don't know that we're seeing them step up." Sick Kids, which had previously defended the reliability of Motherisk's hair tests, issued a public apology in October 2015 for "unacceptable" practices at the lab after completing an internal probe. Soon after, retired justice Susan Lang's independent review of Motherisk - conducted amid an ongoing Star investigation - found the hospital failed to provide meaningful oversight of Motherisk, and the lab's hair and drug alcohol test results were "inadequate" and "unreliable" for use in child protection and criminal cases. Established on Lang's recommendation, the Motherisk Commission of Inquiry is now reviewing high-priority child protection cases to see if positive Motherisk tests - often accepted without question as proof of parental substance abuse - played too significant a role in decisions to remove children from their families. These review efforts depend heavily on children's aid societies, which spend between eight and 20 hours on each file, according to OACAS. The Ministry of Children and Youth Services has given $1.5 million in additional funding to OACAS. Although Sick Kids has provided information to help locate relevant files, the hospital has yet to contribute financially, Ballantyne said. "The costs that are involved in doing this work are significant, so what role are they and can they be playing in these costs?" she said. Sick Kids declined to make CEO Michael Apkon available for an interview on Monday. In a response to an email from the Star, hospital spokesperson Matet Nebres said only that "the hospital continues to cooperate with (the) ongoing review, and to provide support if and when requested, in order to address the concerns of families who believe that they may have been negatively affected by the Motherisk Drug Testing Lab." SickKids has been named in several proposed lawsuits. Apkon has previously acknowledged the hospital "may need to participate in compensating impacted families." Before the lab was shuttered in 2015, Motherisk actively marketed its hair drug and alcohol tests to child protection agencies, which commissioned the lab to test the hair of 16,000 individuals between 2005 and 2015, Lang found. With each test costing $700, it was a lucrative proposition, as the Star has previously reported. Motherisk commission lawyer Lorne Glass said SickKids has been "very co-operative" in terms of organizing their data to make it easier for his team to connect with children's aid societies and reach affected families, but he declined to weigh in on the question of additional funding. "We're independent of the agencies. What we're looking for is to see cases where parents and children should get another shot at it. And . . . Sick Kids, they've assisted us in doing that," he said. The commission, lead by retired justice Judith Beaman, has so far reviewed more than 500 cases. Of those, it has identified 17 where Motherisk results played a significant role - evidence, as Ballantyne sees it, that in most cases, the societies appropriately weighed a variety of factors. Ballantyne stressed that Children's Aid Societies work closely with Sick Kids "all the time," emphasizing the need to "maintain that relationship and trust." That trust was tested in October 2014, when a court of appeal decision in a criminal case that had relied on the Motherisk's hair drug cast doubt on the reliability of the lab's evidence, which was previously seen as almost infallible. Child protection agencies were unclear about how to proceed in active files that had relied on Motherisk testing, so Ballantyne sought answers from Sick Kids. "We were told all the way up the line that there was not a problem," she said. "We believed it because they (the hospital) brought their experts in to prove (it) to us." That changed in November 2014, when the ministry appointed Lang to conduct a review of five years of Motherisk testing. But it wasn't until the next spring the societies received clear direction from the government to stop relying on Motherisk tests. A Star investigation found the method Motherisk was using to test hair for drugs prior to 2010 was not considered by experts to be the "gold-standard test." The Lang report, which expanded its scope from five years of hair testing to 10, confirmed this finding, and concluded Motherisk's tests "fell woefully short of internationally recognized forensic standards." Ballantyne's reaction to the Lang report was, as she puts it, "Like, whoa. Clearly we didn't have the whole story." While she acknowledged "we are all learning" from the problems at Motherisk, she said too much blame has been placed on the societies. "One of the primary experts in the province of Ontario that put itself out there as having this expertise, in fact didn't really have this expertise. That was a big part of the travesty," she said. "Sick Kids does a lot of great work for children, but it this situation, they erred." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt